Adurbad-i Mahraspand explained

Adurbad-i Mahraspand
Native Name:Ādurbād-ī Mahraspand
Native Name Lang:pal
Birth Place:Makran or Pars
Rank:High priest (mowbedan mowbed) of Sasanian Iran
Relations:Mahraspand (father)

Ādurbād-ī Mahraspand ("Ādurbād, son of Mahraspand") was an influential Zoroastrian high priest (mowbedan mowbed) during the reign of the Sasanian king (shah) Shapur II .

Biography

In the Middle Persian Bundahishn, Adurbad's lineage is traced back to the legendary Dursarw, a son of the Pishdadian king Manuchehr. In al-Biruni's The Remaining Signs of Past Centuries, he is also mentioned as the descendant of Dursarw. According to the Denkard, Adurbad was from the "village Kuran", which may be a corruption of "a village of Makran", a province in southeastern Iran. The place may also refer to a place in Pars.

According to Zoroastrian traditions, a proof of the validity of his line of religious traditions was that he underwent the ordeal of molten bronze. That is metal was poured on his chest and he emerged as unscathed. According to Iranica, "In keeping with his religious zeal, Ādurbād was a force in the enactment and implementing of decrees against non-Zoroastrians; the established church is described as having then fallen on evil days, plagued by doubt and infidelity.".

Various standard texts (collection of wise counsels) are attributed to him. The Denkard ascribes admonitions to Adurbad; and an Arabic version of these admonitions occur in the work of Miskawayh's . Two groups of his counsels occur in extant Middle Persian text. The first group of counsels contain his addresses to his and is in part translated by Miskawayh in Arabic. The second group comprises his supposed deathbed utterances. A collection of questions is addressed to him by a disciple and his responses are found in the Pahlavi Rivayat. A translation of some of the Middle Persian counsels exist in the book: R. C. Zaehner, The Teachings of the Magi, London, 1956.

Some Counsels

Sources

External links